English, asked by Fukrabeatboxer, 5 months ago

Lifeguards are paid to rescue other swimmers in distress.(Name the part of speech of the word 'Lifeguards')-----​

Answers

Answered by Arighnach
0

Answer:

“Where’s Haruo?”  Jim Kakuk, lined up just outside the breakers and next to me, shrugged. I scanned the surf zone again at Pillar Point and counted the boaters…one, two, three, four, five.  No Haruo.  “We’ve got to find him.”

We were surfing at Microwave on a blustery day with good-sized swells crashing through every few seconds.  We were trying out a prototype of a washdeck slalom kayak in the surf, and it was Haruo Hasegawa’s turn to play in it.  He had taken a wave a couple of minutes ago, but now was gone.  Jim and I told the other guys that we were going to find Haruo, and we took off in the likely direction—down wave along the wind path.

Ten minutes later we spotted him about 100 meters off the southwest end of the jetty, swimming feebly, sans kayak.  As we approached him, we saw that he was exhausted.  I helped Haruo climb on to the stern of Jim’s kayak, and Jim paddled him to the inside of the jetty, where we helped Haruo onto the rocks.  From there, he walked back to the put-in at the harbor.  The boat and Haruo’s paddle were lost for good, swallowed by the sea.  Later, safe and sound, Haruo told us he came out of his boat on a dumping wave and the wind blew it away.  He started swimming to shore 400 meters away, but tired after 20 minutes of slow progress in the 52F water.

Explanation:

mark me as brainliest

Similar questions